yeah, the others are starting to edge into bronzeville (which is kinda ironic given the name)...
yeah, the others are starting to edge into bronzeville (which is kinda ironic given the name)...
well studio heads can no longer say that people won’t watch a film starring or made by a black man, so in order to keep the racism alive, they’re now placing obstacles in front of black women.
maybe it was meant to read; “which i loved AND was inspired by...” (editors needed asap)
i may be in the minority, but i loved jada pinkett in “demon night.” she and billy zane had great chemistry together...at least in my opinion.
if i learned anything from the premise of “undercover boss” is that many “bosses” in charge of operations don’t know a damn thing about those operations. some of them appear entirely inept. you can bet that those making decisions are so far removed from the movie-making process and the true market that they only…
eeewww.... everyone knows the dead only eat the brains....
i’m black, female and a writer who has moved from writing romance to writing horror (two short fiction works already published in horror magazines). so that’s a whole lot of bunk.
i’m sure carlson can’t differentiate between samuel l. jackson and lawrence fishburne. oh wait a minute, that’s already happened....
how is it i didn’t know about this one until a few years ago (and i was grown in the 80s):
the wife is another camille...as in cosby...
while he’s wearing red stilettos...
and star trek incarnations...
he just manifesting his inner desire to be white, is all...
the merge of comedy/drama (or dramedy) was very well done with the seminal series m*a*s*h. but that was from the period where television producers took chances (ala “all in the family”).
ok, i just have to put this here:
i saw her interview on cbs sunday morning.
surmised from another article regarding this incident, the flight attendant was a black male.
i’m right there with you. the way black men have easily sold out black women over several generations (and even in africa) tells me that black women’s future isn’t safe in the hands of black men. the shuck and jive coonsters in the rap industry is a blatant example of black men treading on the backs of black women to…
she looks very much like Melanie Lynske:
this falls in line with what i read recently about how media shapes the wrong narrative regarding af-americans and other minorities. it is usually a conscious decision based on what editors think definitely will and what they hopefully can sell to the populace.